The Dante Deception: Reading List

This book took quite a bit of research, but the sources were fascinating! It’s not really homework if you’d read about this stuff anyway, right? Anyhoo, if you’re also interested in art forgery, medieval manuscripts, Russian organized crime, Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata, or the Bolshoi ballet, here are the sources I used. Book links will take you to Amazon through my affiliate link – if you buy the book, Amazon will give me a few extra cents for my research slush fund!

Forgery, Medieval Manuscripts, Art

Books

The Art of Forgery by Noah Charney. I can’t recommend this enough. Famous forgers, their techniques, how they were caught – I tore through this on a few cold winter nights. It’s as entertaining as a novel. After reading this, I wanted to put SO MUCH MORE info into the book. I had to hold myself back because the damn thing was already 100,000 words. Sigh.

Provenance: How a Con Man and a Forger Rewrote the History of Modern Art by Laney Salisbury & Aly Sujo. This book focuses on one famous case – how a con man and a single dad tricked the British art world into buying and displaying hundreds of forged pieces of art. If you’ve ever wondered how to fake a provenance, this book gives you the dirty details. Surprisingly, these guys make it look pretty easy. I’m sure security has been tightened up since this, but still. Worth a read.

The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro. This novel picks up after the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist – the heroine, Claire, makes a deal with a gallery owner to forge one of the stolen paintings. But when she starts to inspect the Degas, she thinks it’s a forgery, despite having hung in the Gardner museum as an original for decades. I’m not crazy about this book as a novel, but there are some interesting details about what it takes to forge a painting, including baking it in an oven. No joke.

Websites & Documentaries

Khan Academy: Books and the Dissemination of Knowledge in Medieval Europe

Brighten up your Twitter feed! Follow course presenter Erik Kwakkel, a medieval book historian at Leiden. I love this guy.

Pigments through the Ages: Learn more about modern and ancient pigments, including the ultramarine Sinclair remembers Christof working so hard to perfect for a forged Vermeer.

Medieval Writing: Handling Medieval Manuscripts. What’s worse for a manuscript, oil or water? Acid or insects? Do you really need white gloves to handle one? This is a good source for basic info.

Medieval Calligraphy: This page has a great summary of popular medieval calligraphy styles, from copperplate to Carolingian miniscule. How’s that for a band name? Performing live – Carolingian Miniscule!

TheUntappedSource.com: The First Stolen Painting : Hans Memling’s “The Last Judgment.” Art heist fans, start your engines. The first recorded stolen painting was a triptych by Hans Memling. You can bet this catches Christof’s attention.

Dante: The Inferno & the Vita Nuova

Books

The Inferno by Dante Alighieri; translated by John Ciardi. The edition I used was much older – from 1954! I picked it up at a library book sale when I was in college and hung onto it, never knowing when it might come in handy. This is a reprint of the Ciardi translation I used.

Websites

The World of Dante’s Gustave Doré Gallery: This page contains all the illustrations Gustave Doré did for his illustrated version of the Inferno. These are the pictures in the book Natalie steals from her father’s library in Chapter 8.

Pathways through Literature: The Vita Nuova manuscript and editorial history. When Christof mentions that scholars don’t even know how the poem is meant to appear (stanzas vs. paragraphs), this is where that little nugget came from.

The British Library, Manuscript Viewer: Check out every single folio of the Yates Thompson manuscript in glorious color. The British Library is FREAKING AMAZING. I could spend days prowling their manuscript collection. Alas. There are more books to write that do not involve medieval manuscripts.

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Robbery

Websites & Documentaries

Unsolved ’72 Theft of Montreal Museum of Fine Arts: This fantastic blog is a series of posts written by Catherine Schofield Sezgin. She has a degree in International Art Crime Studies, which is freaking awesome. In terms of sources, she spoke to Bill Bantey, the first person the museum security guard called after the theft. Her posts cover details of the robbery, as well as the pieces stolen.

“Le Colombo de l’art”: This 2:30 snippet from the full-length documentary of the same name is on Vimeo…but it’s in French and there are no English subtitles. YMMV. It’s about the detective, known as the “Colombo of Art,” who worked this case.

The Bolshoi Ballet

Websites & Videos

SFBalletBlog.org: Myrtha Unveiled. In this piece, Elana Altman – a soloist with the San Francisco Ballet – talks about what it takes to play Myrtha in Giselle. This is the role Roza dances before Lazovsky gets her a promotion into the lead role.

BBC.com: Barnsley ballerina Tala Lee Turton dances on Bolshoi stage. A bit of detail about what it takes to train for the Bolshoi.

TheBalletBag.com: Go for Fouetté Gold. In my book, Roza has a little trouble with her fouetté turns, just like her idol, Maya Plisetskaya. This post is where I got that little tidbit. There are some embedded videos here that show you different ballerinas’ techniques and styles in performing this move. All I can say is…wow.

The Chechen Wars

Books

A Small Corner of Hell by Anna Politkovskaya. Yes, she’s biased. And yes, she was murdered for her criticism of the Putin regime. All politics aside, this is an unforgettable account of her trips to Chechnya during the course of the second Chechen War.

Russia’s Wars in Chechnya 1994-2009 by Mark Galeotti. When you have no idea what happened, you need something basic to start with. This primer runs through both Chechen wars with no frills. It’s more detailed than an outline, but it doesn’t stray into fluff or human experience. It’s solely about the who, what, when, where, and why.

TheWolfoftheCaucasus.blogspot.com: This post, “Witness Account Of Russian War Crimes In Chechnya,” is not for the faint of heart. It contains descriptions of alleged war crimes that might give you a few nightmares.

Russian Organized Crime

Books

Comrade Criminal: Russia’s New Mafiya by Stephen Handelman. An in-depth and scholarly look at how Russian organized crime became so rich and so powerful. I mostly used the opening chapters, where Handelman described Russian criminal life from early days under the tsars to the infamous “Bitch War” after World War II. He conducted interviews with mobsters, police, and the KGB for this book.

The Threat of Russian Organized Crime: This document, from the US Department of Justice, gives a good overview of how far organized crime stretches in Russia – and how it got that way. The beginning is more general, while the latter chapters focus specifically on the Urals.

Mashable.com: The coded world of Russian prison tattoos. This is where I got the visuals for Valentin and Makar Lazovsky’s tattoos.

YouTube: Thieves by Law: This 2010 documentary is available on YouTube with English subtitles. Some of these men are still at large, living abroad. It’s fascinating to hear them describe the wild and woolly days after the fall of Communism. People made SO MUCH MONEY in SUCH A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME.

Russian Government, Spies, and Hackers

Books

Expelled: A Journalist’s Descent into the Russian Mafia State by Luke Harding. If you’ve ever wondered what kind of WTF stuff the FSB might pull on you as a foreigner in Russia, this is the book for you. Some of it seems downright unbelievable. You’ll know what I’m talking about when you get the part about the sex manual.

Putin’s Russia: Life in a Failing Democracy by Anna Politkovskaya. While the previous book of hers I bought was focused on Chechnya, this is more about the corruption endemic to the Putin regime. Some of it makes you angry, some of it makes you sad.

Mafiaboy: A Portrait of the Hacker as a Young Man by Michael Calce. Okay, so he’s not a Russian hacker, but he’s a guy who interacted with Russian hackers in the heydey of TNT/pHORCE, an IRC chat group created by the famous Russian hacker DreamWalker.

Websites

Wikipedia: Bet you didn’t know there was a Wikipedia page on how classified information is categorized in Russia. BOOM! Neither did I.

InfoSecurityMagazine.com: Digging Up the Hacking Underground. A super-basic look at how hackers are diversifying and some of the kits they create.

Taia Global: Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) Internet Operations Against Ukraine. Let’s say you’re a breakaway Soviet republic just trying to make it on your own. Let’s say the mother ship isn’t happy about it. How might they use ones and zeroes to screw you over? Let us count the ways.

Corporate Defense Strategies: This presentation tells you what to expect when you think someone’s trying to infiltrate your shit. This was a big help when writing Liliya’s scenes.

Russia, General

Books

Among the Russians by Colin Thubron. In 1980, Thubron traveled through Russia and collected his thoughts and experiences about ordinary Russian life. It’s a lyrical read, although he uses some really weird words sometimes. Just go with it. You’ll come away with as clear a picture as I think it’s possible to have about day-to-day life in late Communist Russia.

The Russians by Hedrick Smith. This one’s a classic! A lot of the details for Stepan Lazovsky’s chapter came from this book – like how the military elite had a special cafeteria in an unmarked building where they could get hot take-out meals that weren’t available to the general public.

A Russian Journal by John Steinbeck and Frank Capa. I wrote an entire post about this book – click here to read it. I found this book late in the research process, but couldn’t help getting it. What can I say? I’m a Salinas girl growing fonder of Steinbeck the older I get. His no-frills observations steer cleer of politics and show you the post-war devastation in European Russia.

The Sinclairs: Whisky, Moonlight Sonata, and the Origin Story for the Dante Manuscript

Websites

University of Kentucky U Knowledge: Writing Moonlight: An Analysis of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata Opus 27 No. 2 in C Sharp Minor. This is interesting because it’s a student paper written by a chemical engineering major. What makes Moonlight Sonata so powerful and so memorable? I know nothing about music, so it was helpful to have an outsider’s perspective in this paper.

IvoryandStrings: This is a listening log for Moonlight Sonata. It helped me figure out how to describe parts of the melody, so I knew what Sinclair was thinking when he heard it.

YouTube: Pianist Claudio Arrau playing Moonlight Sonata. I listened to a buttload of versions, but this is the one that stuck with me. I still can’t describe why. All the words I think of seem inadequate. Softer? Sadder? You be the judge.

TalkClassical.com: B vs C in Moonlight. There is apparently still a debate over a particular note in Moonlight Sonata. B or C? Again, I’m no musicologist. I relied on this thread for help.

The Glenrothes: Yes, this is the super-expensive whisky Sinclair drinks throughout the book. Every time I reference this whisky, a Vanilla Ice lyric goes through my head: “Anything less than the best is a felony.” That was probably the first time in history The Glenrothes and Vanilla Ice have been linked in any way. You’re welcome.

Wikipedia: Andrea Doria. When Sinclair is concocting his provenance for the Dante manuscript, he sees a painting of a ship called the Andrea Doria. This is the man who bears that name.

Wikipedia: The Pamphilj family. Wikipedia can be surprisingly helpful when it comes to researching arcane genealogy. Here’s what it has to say on the connection between the Doria family and the Pamphilj.

Telegraph.co.uk: Obituary for Princess Orietta Pogson Doria Pamphilj. Sinclair often bases his fake provenances on the lives and adventures of famous – but dead- people who can’t argue back. Here’s one of the Pamphilj family members he mentions in the book.

VanityFair.com: Palazzo Intrigue. A juicy article about the current heirs and the state of the princely Pamphilj family.

The Septic’s Companion: This is a comprehensive guide to British slang, written by a Scottish man living in America. Being as American as they come, I needed some help with Britspeak. This website is funny as well as helpful.

Okay, But What Did You Do with All This Information?

I put it in the book! Wanna see? Click to check out The Dante Deception here on my site.

About the Author

Jenni

I write thrillers, romance, historical fiction, tiara posts, and more. Right now, I'm working on a series of Natalie Brandon thrillers. To find out when new books are released, click here to sign up for my mailing list and get two free books!

The Dante Deception: Reading List was last modified: August 1st, 2016 by Jenni

About Me

I went to science camp in fifth grade. I wasn't special or anything - everyone had to go, even two kids from the one-room schoolhouse down the road. Our counselors were high-school students, but they might as well have been adults. They could drive, they went on dates, they had jobs, and each of us had questions we were dying to ask. Some kids asked about cars. One asked whether they liked being counselors. Me? I asked when we'd finally get to study the French Revolution.

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